Posted on 05/20/2021 5:59:17 PM PDT by Fractal Trader
Well *I’m* having fun at least :)
Boomers love their woo.
Asks an anonymous poster on an internet forum.
Look her up
************
I did and as I suspected she’s a anti vax quack
By 'you guys', of course you mean you.
And bumbos love their poo.
Sure n00b.
Never heard of her, either.
Wikipedia (for what it’s worth) says:
“Sherri Tenpenny is an American anti-vaccination activist who supports the disproved hypothesis that vaccines cause autism. An osteopathic physician, she is the author of four books opposing vaccination.”
Always be skeptical about whichever “expert” you choose to trust. Merely identifying as an “activist” and writing books about medical anecdotes, or dribbling basketballs, or acting against a green screen, or writing lucrative computer code, doesn’t make anyone an “expert” on public policy, pathophysiology, or immunology. For that matter, being the highly vaunted head of a governmental infectious disease research division doesn’t keep that administrator from throwing the baby out with the bath water in favor of a misguided “science-y” desire to run and hide from the boogie man.
When did so many stupid people infiltrate FR?
We're gonna have to put rubber on the walls if you tards continue to post.
What are your credentials then that we should listen to an anonymous internet forum poster?
She’s made no secret or who she is.
If you want to take medical advice from a germ theory denialist, that’s your business.
Human trials started over a year ago now. But that won’t stop her.
She’ll be blazed in red headlines on The Liberty Daily claiming every malady known to man is caused by vaccines every few weeks forevermore.
Perhaps because they took federal funds and are fufilling a contract. The government spigot is open wide.
"Dr. Sherri J. Tenpenny is an osteopathic medical doctor, board certified in three medical specialties. Widely regarded as the most knowledgeable and outspoken physician on the adverse impact that vaccines can have on health, Dr. Tenpenny has been a guest on hundreds of radio and national television programs (including the Dr. Oz Show and the Today Show Australia). She has lectured at Cleveland State University and Case Western Reserve Medical School, and has been a speaker at conventions, both nationally and internationally, as a recognized expert on a wide range topics within the field of Integrative Medicine including breast health, breast thermography, women's hormones, medical uses of iodine and the adverse effects vaccines have on health.
Dr. Tenpenny is the author of several books, including best seller, 'Saying No To Vaccines'. She is contributing author for several other books including 'Textbook of Food and Nutrients in Disease Management'. Her articles for magazines have been published in over 10 languages around the world.
From 1986 to 1998, she was a full time Emergency Medicine physician and the director of the Emergency Department in Findlay, Ohio. Dr. Tenpenny’s corporate experience includes serving as the Medical Director at Sanoviv Medical Center, a 40-bed hospital located in Rosarita, Mexico in 2008 and Chief Medical Consultant for Parker Hannifin, a Fortune 250 Company with 60,000 employees in 48 countries, from 2012 to 2014.
Currently, she attends to patients two days per week at Tenpenny Integrative Medical Center, located in Cleveland, Ohio, where patients from nearly all 50 states and 17 countries have gotten well using a combination of conventional and holistic therapies.
...
1980 - UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO
Bachelor of Arts, Biology;
Minor in Music | Graduated Cum Laude (1980)
1984 - KIRKSVILLE COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE
Doctor of Osteopathy | Graduated Cum Laude (1984)
"
https://www.drtenpenny.com/
And, because some don't know what a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine is (my personal physician is a D.O)...
"Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine
Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO or D.O.) is a professional doctoral degree of osteopathic medicine offered by medical schools in the United States. A DO graduate may become licensed as an osteopathic physician, similar to a physician who has earned the Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree.[1] There is a distinction between osteopathic physicians trained within the United States and those trained outside of the United States. Osteopathic physicians, or DOs, currently have unlimited practice rights in roughly 74 countries, with partial practice rights in many more;[2][3][failed verification] DOs have full practice rights in all 50 US states. As of 2018, there were more than 145,000 osteopathic physicians and osteopathic medical students in the United States.[4]
DO degrees are offered in the United States at 36 medical schools, at 57 locations compared to MD degrees offered at 171 schools.[5][6][7] As of 2015, more than 20% of all medical school enrollment were DO students.[8][9] The curricula at osteopathic medical schools are similar to those at MD-granting medical schools, which focus the first two years on the biomedical and clinical sciences, then two years on core clinical training in the clinical specialties.[10]
Upon completing medical school, a DO graduate may enter an internship or residency training program, which may be followed by fellowship training.[10] DO graduates attend the same graduate medical education programs as their MD counterparts.[11]
One notable difference between DO and MD training is that DOs in training spend 300–500 hours studying techniques for hands-on manipulation of the human musculoskeletal system.[1][12]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_of_Osteopathic_Medicine
"Osteopathic medicine in the United States
Osteopathic medicine is a branch of the medical profession in the United States. Osteopathic physicians (DOs) are licensed to practice medicine and surgery in all 50 states and are recognized to varying degrees in 85 other countries. The field is distinct from osteopathic practices offered in nations outside of the U.S., whose graduates and practitioners are generally not considered part of core medical staff nor of medicine itself. Only graduates of American osteopathic medical colleges may practice the full scope of medicine and surgery generally considered to be medicine by the general public.
...
American "osteopaths" became "osteopathic medical doctors", ultimately achieving full practice rights as medical doctors in all 50 states, including serving in the United States Armed Forces as physicians and surgeons.[1][2]
In modern medicine, any distinction between the MD and the DO professions has eroded steadily. Diminishing numbers of DO graduates enter primary care fields,[3] fewer use osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT), and all allopathic (MD) and osteopathic (DO) physicians train under the same residency programs.[4][5][6]
In the 21st century, the training of osteopathic physicians in the United States is virtually indistinguishable from the training of allopathic physicians (MDs).[7] Osteopathic physicians attend four years of medical school followed by an internship and a minimum two years of residency. They use all conventional methods of diagnosis and treatment. Though still trained in OMT,[8] the modern derivative of Still's techniques,[9][10] they work in all specialties of medicine. There are ongoing debates about the utility of maintaining separate, distinct pathways for educating physicians in the United States.[6][11]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteopathic_medicine_in_the_United_States
She is one of the greatest heroes in the telling the truth about the evil vaccine industry
Most of us that have been telling the truth about this evil horrible industry has been pilloried in pinned slandered and pretty much everything else you can imagine
But because we care about people ; we will continue on warning people about poisoning themselves - and ruining their lives!!
There’s a Cytokine Storm a coming and it will not discriminate.
Amen to that.
With not much in the way of vaccines until the 1960’s, I am shocked that our population did not go to zero. Shocked, I tell you.
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